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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 91-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 100 - 100
1 Mar 2009
Migaud H Girard J Trichard T Remy F Soenen M Bachour F Duquennoy A
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Purpose of the study: Theoretically, long-term functional and radiographic degradation is predictable after ankle fusion, but sound evidence from consecutive analysis of the same cohort is lacking. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the same cohort of patients who underwent ankle fusion.

Material and Methods: The cohort included 52 ankle fusions which had been analyzed in 1984 at seven years (2–22 years) of follow-up then again in 2000 using the same evaluation criteria. Among the 52 patients, six were lost to follow-up, 20 had died and one had undergone leg amputation. The second analysis thus included 25 patients (18 men and 7 women), mean age 62±12.6 years (40–94) at the 2000 assessment performed 23±4.5 years (19–36 years) after the fusion. Functional outcome was assessed with the 100-point Duquennoy scale. Osteoarthritis of the subtalar and mediotarsal joints were assessed preoperatively and at follow-up using the same scale.

Results: The functional outcome did not deteriorate significantly between 1984 and 2000. The mean score was 65.8±22.6 (19–92) in 1984 and 64.7±18.3 (34–90) in 2000 (p=0.67). Fifteen patients (60%) had a good or very good outcome at seven years, and 14 (56%) at 23 years. Between 1984 and 2000, ten patients improved their score (on average 10.4 points, range 1–21 points), two had an unchanged score and thirteen a lower score (on average 10 points, range −1 to −24). Ten of these thirteen patients developed severe intercurrent conditions explaining the degradation. At last follow-up, sixteen ankles were pain free or nearly pain free. Twelve patients considered their ankle as a forgotten problem and had no regrets concerning the operation. The evolution of the subtalar joint in 16 cases (nine fusions including five at the same time as the ankle fusion and four performed within four years) showed that all developed early osteoarthrtic degradation with aggravation between 1984 and 2000, leading in the majority of cases to severe degenerative disease. This osteoarthritis was painful in less than one-third of the cases (including the four secondary subtalar fusions and the four sub-talar fusions which were painful at mobilization). The mediotarsal joints degradation was later and less severe than for the subtalar joint with a majority of moderate osteoarthritis. Ten ankles exhibited compensatory hypermobility of the forefoot measured at more than 15° without pain.

Discussion: This long-term follow-up with two successive assessments using the same evaluation criteria did not demonstrated late degradation of function expected after ankle fusion. It did show however the presence of radiographic degradation of the subtalar joint but with little clinical expression at a minimal follow-up of 19 years. There was no need for complementary fusion between 4 and 23 years follow-up.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 90-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 267 - 267
1 Jul 2008
MIGAUD H PINOIT Y HERENT S SOENEN M BACHOUR F MAY O LAFFARGUE P DUHAMEL A DEVOS P
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Purpose of the study: In order to evaluate the influence of prosthesis design and resurfacing on the outcome of total hip arthroplasty (THA) implanted without cement, we reviewed the orthopedic literature from 1980 to 2004.

Material and methods: The PubMed database was screened from 1980 to 2004 for publications reporting cementless THA with a follow-up analysis. The same criteria were used to screen three registries. In all, the publications retained had studied 50,162 cementless THA (mean patient age 48.9 years, mean follow-up 6.5 years) where were studied according to rate of revision, presence of osteolysis, and presence of operative fractures. Eleven families of components grouped together the majority of prostheses: five acetabular families [screw fixation without resurfacing (n=2997), screw fixation with hydroxyapatite (HA) resurfacing (n=3618), screw fixation with corindon resurfacing (2360), press-fit mac-roporous (15691), press-fit HA (6094)]; and six families of femoral pivots [straight macroprous (n=7502), straight HA (n=3255), straight corindon (n=6136), anatomic HA (n=3468), anatomic macroporous (n=1215), anatomic corindon (n=1041)].

Results: The rates of revision and of osteolysis were higher for screw fixed cups without resurfacing. For screw fixed or press-fit cups, HA resurfacing did not reduce the rate of revision compared with corindon coated or macroporous implants. For anatomic pivots, adjunction of HA resurfacing reduced the rate of revision but at the shortest follow-up and without reducing the rate of osteolysis. Corindon-coated pivots gave comparable results for straight or anatomic implants. Conversely, HA-coated pivots gave better results with an anatomic design. The shape of the pivot had les effect than resurfacing on osteolysis and revision, but had a greater influence on operative fractures (2.9% for straight implants versus 4.6% for anatomic versions).

Conclusion: In all:

uncoated implants should be abandoned;

HA resurfacing does not reduce the rate of revision and can be associated with a higher rage of osteolysis;

there is no advantage between screw fixed or press-fit cups as long as the cup has a quality resurfacing;

there is no real difference between straight and anatomic pivots except that intraoperative fracture can be lower for the straight implants.